Ferguson protests turn peaceful with new State Patrol in charge

WASHINGTON, Aug. 15 (UPI) -- Protests in Ferguson took on a new tone Thursday evening as Missouri State Patrol Captain Ron Johnson took charge, marching with demonstrators and listening to their concerns.

"This is currently my community and my home," Johnson said at the press conference. "We need to break the cycle of violence... and build trust."

The effect was immediate. Johnson, who is black and grew up in the area, walked among protesters during marches around 5 p.m. After dark, the crowded streets outside a burned-out QuikTrip, where many of the more violent standoffs had begun in recent days, took on an almost jubilant atmosphere, with music and free food.

A brief moment of tension threatened to break the new detente, when two St. Louis County Police squad cars showed up at the QuikTrip around 7:30 and were met with boos from the gathered crowd. But they left, rather than engaging protesters, and the moment passed without incident.

At a press conference from his vacation spot in Martha's Vineyard Thursday, President Obama called for "peace and calm."

"I know emotions are raw right now in Ferguson, and there are certainly passionate differences about what has happened," Obama said. "But let's remember that we're all part of one American family."

Both he and Gov. Nixon called the police response unacceptable, but also laid some blame at the feet of those protesters who had turned violent, throwing bricks and bottles at officers.

Obama also said he ordered an independent investigation by the Department of Justice and the FBI to look into the shooting.

But the investigation will still be primarily handled by the St. Louis County Police, who have so far refused to name the officer who shot Brown, citing death threats. Nor have they revealed basic autopsy details like the number of times Brown was shot, which are generally made public within a few days.

Demonstrators chanted "What's his name? What's his name?" at Johnson and SLCP Chief Jon Belmar Thursday night, and the American Civil Liberties Union filed a lawsuit demanding the police release the shooting report under Missouri's Sunshine law, which requires government records be made public.

Sources told CNN the release may be imminent: Belmar said it could come "in the next day or two" while others suggested it would happen as early as Friday.

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